Venezuela’s Supreme Court of Justice (TSJ) has recently ordered a national institute to pay indemnities to one of its employees after she suffered a workplace injury in its oil-backed cryptocurrency petro.

According to Sputnik, the Supreme Court’s ruling was based on a decree on “Cryptoassets and the Sovereign Cryptocurrency Petro,” which was approved in April by the country’s Constituent National Assembly and establishes the “basis for the management of these alternative mechanisms in financial and commercial activity”.

Per the ruling, the National Institute of Agricultural Research (Inia), will have to pay Venezuelan citizen Maria Elena Matos “the equivalent of 266 petros” following a workplace injury. The value of 266 petros is estimated to be of $15,960.

A note the Supreme Court released on social media reads:

“It is established that the Supreme Court set this criterion taking as a reference the value that the National Executive sets for the petro, in order to materialize justice in favor of whoever is affected in their rights and interests, and to counteract the actions that have sought to destabilize the national economy.”

As CCN covered, the Venezuelan government, after months of speculation, announced the Petro was available for sale on November 5. It can be purchased with bitcoin and litecoin, and is presumably not available for purchase with the country’s fiat currency, the sovereign bolivar.

Digging into the cryptocurrency’s whitepaper seemed to show only it was a ‘blatant’ copy of Dash, as it uses the same mining algorithm, has similar features, and even appears to have a part of the document lifted from that of the cryptocurrency.